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Past Summer Olympics at a glance

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  • Past Summer Olympics at a glance

    San Antonio Express , TX
    Aug 11 2004

    Past Summer Olympics at a glance


    About 776 B.C.: A speed demon from the Greek city of Elis was the
    first Olympic champion. Of course, the first Olympics were limited to
    one event, a sprint under 200 meters called the stadion, and to
    Greeks only.


    708 B.C.: The pentathlon became part of the Olympics, with five
    events: The stadion, the diaulos (a sprint covering two lengths of
    the stadium), the dolichos (a longer race of varying length), the
    long jump and the discus.

    692 B.C.: Pantakles of Athens claimed the first repeat championship,
    earning his second prized olive wreath in the stadion .


    512 B.C.: The longest winning streak in Olympics history is snapped,
    as wrestler Milton of Kronon is beaten. Milton won the youth division
    of the wrestling in 540 B.C., then five adult titles in a row,
    through 516 B.C.

    396 B.C.: Kyniska, daughter of the king of Sparta, was the first
    woman to be listed as an Olympic champion. Her victory in the
    four-horse chariot race was notable because married women were not
    allowed to even watch the games, much less participate. She beat the
    rule on a technicality - the winner's wreath went to the owner of the
    chariot, not the driver.

    A.D. 369: The last recorded champion of the ancient Olympics was
    boxer Varasdates, the prince of Armenia. In 393, the emperor of Rome
    abolished the games, calling them a pagan ritual.

    1896: The first modern Olympic Games, brainchild of the Frenchman
    Baron Pierre de Coubertin, were held in Athens.


    1900: Holding the Olympics as part of the Paris world's fair turned
    out to be a disaster, as the events were lost amid the fair and
    spread out over five months.

    1904: The next games were little better, scattered over 41/2 months
    as part of the St. Louis world's fair.

    1908: London put on the games with only 10 months' lead time,
    erecting a multipurpose stadium that included tracks for running and
    cycling, a soccer field, a swimming pool and a platform for wrestling
    and gymnastics.


    1912: Stockholm raised the bar for future Olympics, introducing
    electronic timing and public-address systems. U.S. athlete Jim Thorpe
    was so dominant in the decathlon that his gold-medal score in 1912
    would have been good enough for a medal 36 years later.

    1920: After the 1916 Games, scheduled for Berlin, were canceled,
    Antwerp was awarded the 1920 Games as compensation for being turned
    into a mess during World War I.

    1924: Baron de Coubertin, scheduled to retire as head of the
    International Olympic Committee in 1925, finally got the games to
    come back to Paris.


    1928: A tradition was established in Amsterdam, as the host nation
    marched into the opening ceremonies first and Greece last.

    1932: Los Angeles proved the games could be profitable, even during
    the Great Depression. The 16-day event made $1 million.

    1936: The Nazis tried to turn the event into a propaganda device but
    U.S. runner Jesse Owens would have none of it, winning four gold
    medals.

    1948: Japan had other business on its mind in 1940 and the games were
    canceled, as were the 1944 Olympics scheduled for London. The 1948
    Games went to London.

    1952: Finland's efficient job of hosting the Olympics caused many to
    suggest all future games be held in Scandinavia.

    1956: The first summer Olympics held in November and December (summer
    in the Southern Hemisphere) came off without a hitch in Melbourne -
    and without any horses, prevented from entering Australia by strict
    quarantine laws.

    1960: Rome got its second chance at hosting the games, and put on an
    event filled with history (the wrestling was held in a 2,000-year-old
    stadium) and drama (the marathon finished under the Arch of
    Constantine).

    1964: Japan also got its second chance at the games, and the first
    Olympics held in Asia were filled with close races and world records.


    1968: Holding the games in Mexico City - more than a mile above sea
    level - was a controversial choice. Distance runners suffered, but
    longstanding world records were set in the long jump (Bob Beamon's
    leap of 29-21/2, which lasted for 22 years) and the men's 1,600-meter
    relay (2:56.16, which stood for 24 years).

    1972: The Munich Games were marked by tragedy - the death of 11
    Israeli athletes in a terrorist attack - and triumph - Mark Spitz's
    seven gold medals in swimming.

    1976: Romanian gymnast Nadia Comaneci posted the first perfect score
    in Olympics history, then went on to do it six more times - and earn
    three gold medals.

    1980: In protest of the Soviets' invasion of Afghanistan, the United
    States boycotted the games in Moscow, along with 64 other nations.

    1984: After the 1972 terrorist attack and the financial losses
    incurred by Montreal in 1976, only one city - Los Angeles - even bid
    for the 1984 Games. It was the first Olympics since 1896 to be staged
    without government funding, and it became a model after it made a
    $225 million profit.

    1988: South Korea got the second games in Asia off to a dramatic
    start, with 1936 marathon winner Sohn Kee-chung running the torch
    into the stadium. Sohn had been forced to compete under a Japanese
    name in 1936, since Korea had been occupied by Japan.

    1992: Basketball's "Dream Team" made its debut in Barcelona, and the
    professionals averaged 117 points a game and never called a time-out.


    1996: The centennial games were awarded to Atlanta instead of Athens,
    and Carl Lewis made history by winning his fourth gold medal in the
    long jump.

    2000: Sydney was the site for the largest games in history, with
    10,649 athletes and 300 events. Athletes from 80 nations claimed
    medals.
    David King

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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